Loading organizations...

§ Private Profile · NV, USA
Full-stack technology company developing Mobile Micro-Factories (MMFs) for automated home component manufacturing in new home construction.
Key people at Cuby.
Cuby is a construction technology company that develops scalable hardware and software systems, including Mobile Micro Factories, to automate and improve the new home construction process. Inspired by the Toyota Production System, the company's mobile facilities enable four unskilled workers to manufacture and assemble home components for onsite final assembly in 45 to 60 days. The enterprise licenses these facilities through Special Purpose Vehicles with local developers, requiring a $10 million investment that covers $6.5 million in upfront capital expenditures for hardware costing approximately $5.5 million. Having logged over 400,000 engineering hours, the organization operates a research facility in Belarus and is preparing its first United States deployment in Nevada, tied to a local developer pipeline of 3,300 homes to achieve 20 percent lower costs. The company was founded by Aleks Gampel and Oleg Kandrashou.
Key people at Cuby.
Cuby is a technology company that develops and deploys Mobile Micro-Factories (MMFs) to manufacture and assemble homes. Their product is a scalable hardware and software system designed to automate and improve the new home construction process, significantly reducing labor hours and costs while enhancing quality and affordability. Cuby primarily serves the construction and real estate development sectors by providing a decentralized manufacturing model that brings factory-level homebuilding directly to local markets. This approach addresses the skilled labor shortage and rising construction costs, aiming to transform housing development economics. Since its founding in 2018, Cuby has progressed from R&D to early deployment, with its first U.S. factory planned for Nevada in 2026, demonstrating strong growth momentum and industry interest[1][2][4].
Founded in 2018, Cuby was created by a team of developers and engineers with deep real estate development experience who recognized the critical pain points in traditional homebuilding. The idea emerged from a desire to solve the housing crisis by radically rethinking construction manufacturing. Instead of building massive centralized factories, Cuby innovated with mobile micro-factories that can be deployed locally, reducing logistical complexity and costs. Early traction includes over 400,000 engineering hours invested and the transition from research to commercial readiness, highlighted by a documentary showcasing their journey from concept to deployment[1][2].
Cuby rides the trend of industrializing and automating construction to address the global housing shortage and labor scarcity. The timing is critical as rising construction costs and a shortage of skilled workers pressure the industry to innovate. By decentralizing manufacturing and integrating software with hardware, Cuby aligns with broader shifts toward modular construction and PropTech innovation. Its approach could reshape real estate economics by reducing build times and costs without disrupting regulatory frameworks, potentially influencing how housing is developed at scale across the U.S. and beyond[1][2][4].
Looking ahead, Cuby aims to deploy 275 mobile micro-factories over the next decade, scaling its model to serve multiple local markets and potentially building a $100 billion+ company in the long term. Trends such as increasing demand for affordable housing, labor shortages, and the push for construction innovation will shape its trajectory. If Cuby successfully executes its vision, it could become a foundational player in the future of homebuilding, driving a shift toward decentralized, technology-enabled construction that balances cost, quality, and speed. This positions Cuby not just as a technology innovator but as a transformative force in addressing one of society’s most pressing challenges[1][4].